Hawke's Bay Today

Expulsion rate for Maori show NZ racism’

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The rate at which Pasifika students are being kicked out of Auckland secondary schools has plunged by 40 per cent in the past five years — but Maori students are still by far the most likely to be expelled.

Preliminar­y data presented at a youth justice conference this week shows that the exclusion rate for Pasifika students dropped from 12.5 for every 1000 students in 2007 to 7.5 last year, compared with 4.2 for every 1000 European students.

But the Maori exclusion rate has barely changed — 17.4 per thousand in 2007 and 16.9 last year, or four times the European rate.

Youth Law educator Ben Mills said the figures reflected ‘‘institutio­nal racism’’.

‘‘The education system in New Zealand is based on a Pakeha/ British model and doesn’t really fit with Maori cultural values.’’

Principal Youth Court Judge Andrew Becroft told the conference that 70 per cent of the most serious youth offenders were not in school, and if there was a ‘‘magic bullet’’ to reduce youth crime it would be to keep them in education.

He said Maori made up only 19 per cent of the Youth Court’s 16 to 19 year age group, but 49 per cent of youths caught by police, 55 per cent of Youth Court defendants and 66 per cent of young people in custody.

‘‘The figures are unacceptab­le in any civilised community.’’

The Ministry of Education has been working with the schools with the highest exclusion rates to reduce exclusions, particular­ly for Maori and Pasifika students.

Ministry northern regional manager Bruce Adin said three clusters had been formed in central-west Auckland, Waitakere and Whangarei where schools work together to take in any students kicked out of any other school.

Mt Albert Grammar School principal Dale Burden, who leads the central-west cluster, said his seven schools had reduced the average time before an excluded student was picked up by another school from 90 days to 27 days.

A co-ordinator keeps tabs on how many students each school expels and takes in.

‘‘So if five are excluded from Lynfield, there is a general expectatio­n that they will take five, and kids get shared around,’’ Mr Burden said.

But he said one local school which excluded the highest number of students refused to join the cluster.

‘‘They were effectivel­y flooding this area,’’ he said.

‘‘There was no informatio­n, they were just performing the minimum legal requiremen­t.’’

Youth Law data shows that the five schools that excluded the highest numbers of students from 2005 to 2009 were all in Auckland.

But the highest exclusion rate per thousand students in 2010 was at Queen Elizabeth College in Palmerston North, the lowestdeci­le secondary school in that city with a roll that has shrunk over 20 years from around 1000 to 200.

Principal Michael Houghton said he took a hard line because of a behaviour problem at the school.

He made a ban on drugs ‘‘nonnegotia­ble’’ and drugs were the biggest cause of exclusions.

Massey High School principal Bruce Ritchie said he also had ‘‘ high expectatio­ns’’ of his students. But he has recently brought in outside agencies to give ‘‘wraparound support’’ to students and their families to try and keep them in school. — APN

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